CLEVELAND, Ohio -- In a city where Donald Trump lost by more than 70 points, it's not too hard to find people who don't think much of his presidency.

Between Trump's attempts to repeal the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, his sparring with foreign countries, his frequent use of social media, and his proposed budget and environmental cuts, the reviews among Cleveland voters polled by cleveland.com were overwhelmingly negative.

Ohio Matters is a series examining important national issues through the eyes of people living across the state.

"The last few months have scared me," said Larry Hunt, 33, "and I'm scared to see what the next few months bring.

We asked five City of Cleveland residents to grade Trump on his first 100 days in office and explain their reasoning. Here's what they said.

Megan Smith

"He has no respect for women, people of color and people of different races," she said. "That's kind of the end-all for me. If you don't have respect for people, you shouldn't be in the highest office in the country."

But when it comes to actually achieving his agenda, Smith said she thinks Trump is in over his head.

"I don't think he came in with a plan of what he was going to do," Smith said. "He's all talk, and it seems like he's trying to push stuff through that he promised, but doesn't know how to do it."

If there's a silver lining in Trump's presidency, Smith said she thinks it's helped force people to choose sides, and motivated people, including herself, who aren't generally very politically involved.

Virgil Hudson

Hudson, a 55-year-old worker at a neighborhood church, said the early days of Trump's presidency have been generally underwhelming, from a historical sense.

"The only thing he did was the Supreme Court justice," Hudson said. "He's got Obamacare to deal with, he's got the budget to deal with, and he's got the fence with the Mexican border to deal with. The best thing he did was stop retreating in Syria and doing the bombing. I think he's got some Ronald Reagan in him."

Hudson said Trump has failed to live up to what he said he was going to do. That's not necessarily a bad thing from where Hudson sits -- he's a Democrat who voted for Clinton.

"The first 100 days don't really count, but if you're going to promise something, you'd better do it," he said.

Larry Hunt

Neighborhood:Shaker SquareGrade: F

Larry Hunt, 33, of ClevelandAndrew J. Tobias, cleveland.com

Hunt, a 33-year-old bartender, said he was "this close" -- holding his index finger and thumb about an inch apart -- to getting a job with the U.S. Postal Service. Then, Trump instituted his freeze, which since has been revoked, on federal government hiring.

"He came into office and tried to hit the ground running. He did the Muslim ban, which was crazy. And then he did the freeze on government spending, which messed me up with the Post Office. Then the bombing. I don't totally disagree with that... but this thing with North Korea, that scares me. It just seems like he's hell-bent on raising hell."

Hunt voted for Clinton, whom he viewed as the "lesser of two evils." But he said Trump has done nothing to win him over.

"I'm just waiting to see. Maybe the man will do something good," he said, chuckling at the idea. "But right now, he's started at an F and he hasn't done anything to change that."

Mordecai Cargill

Neighborhood: GlenvilleGrade: D-

Mordecai Cargill, 26, of ClevelandAndrew J. Tobias, cleveland.com

Cargill, 26, who works in development and fundraising for a community development organizaiton, explained why he refrained from giving Trump an even lower grade.

"I do hold great respect for the office of the presidency, so I don't want to give him an F," Cargill said. "But as someone who works in community development, the cuts he's proposing to HUD [The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development] are deeply short sighted, and really are disastrous to cities, and disastrous to the residents of cities."

Cargill, comparing Trump to his experience voting for former President Barack Obama, also finds fault with Trump's rhetoric and the people he's appointed to his cabinet.

"To me, it's something I've never seen before as a voter."

Caitlin Murphy

Neighborhood: TremontGrade: F

Caitlin Murphy, 24, of ClevelandAndrew J. Tobias, cleveland.com

Murphy, a 24-year-old restaurant server, landscaper and art student, was quick to respond when asked about Trump.

"He's awful. He's not educated. He's reckless," she said.

Asked to narrow it down a little more, Murphy essentially described her opposition Trump's entire agenda.

This includes, proposing cuts in federal arts funding, signing an executive order cutting off international funding to Planned Parenthood, approving the Keystone XL pipeline and reversing an Obama-era climate change plan.

"He didn't get his healthcare bill passed, and that was a good thing," she said. "So maybe he won't demolish things as quickly as I'm afraid he will. But I foresee future conflicts with other countries. So I worry about that, and what that will mean for our relationships with our allies."

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